Posts Tagged ‘bike commute’

the Norwottuck Rail Trail wins!

August 1st, 2008, posted in projects, sustainibility

Sometimes, I silently scold cars that pass me when I’m biking, in a Dave Eggers style imagined conversation.

- You don’t see what I see.

- I am in a hurry.

- The hot air balloons drifting over the cornfields at sunrise…

- I am tired.

- The horses, sheep, cows, winking as you glide by.

- …

- Endless farmland and gracious meadows, rolling green hills. Twisty tall trees, vines hanging down to create a tunnel of green. The birch groves, where, when the early morning sun hits just right, you can very nearly catch sight of where the elves live. On the bridge crossing the Connecticut, squinting a little and tilting your eyebrows just so, the bridge disappears and you are flying into the sunset on your bike, ET style, through the viney green canopies of Never Never Land.

- I am sorry.

- Just think about biking next time.

Also: 20 miles a day X 5 days a week X 10-ish weeks = 1,000 miles! Yeah!

And: Today I got caught in the rain on my way home. It wasn’t so bad at first, the only thing that’s hard about biking in the rain is when my glasses get clouded. But then it started getting really vigorous, and maybe hailing, so I took shelter under a little tunnel because I knew it would pass soon.

After a few minutes, the sun came out, but the rain was still coming down hard core. A rainbow appeared in a perfect arch over the path, lined with trees stretching off into to the horizon, and it was just about the most beautiful thing I’ve ever seen.

This is not my image, but I included it just so you could get a general idea. Sometime I’ll take my camera along and document the beauty myself.

- M

Traveling circus VS documentary animation

July 30th, 2008, posted in general thoughts, travels

So far this summer I have lived two pretty radically opposite lifestyles.

First there was the cross country circus tour

Our school bus was not only converted to run on veggie oil, but the inside was gutted and replaced with futon beds and storage. Every day was different from the next. With the exception of the five days we spent getting our feet off the ground at Jacob’s house in Boston, we were never in a place for more than two or three days tops.

Constantly traveling, never knowing when we would be able to shower next, where we would find a bathroom next, when we would be able to cook meals… Whenever we did cook it was a tricky ordeal, cooking for 11 people on two coleman stoves is not easy. A number of times we drove through the night, jamming all of us on the four or five beds (depending on if the food table was clean) built into the bus.

Collecting and filtering grease was a pretty ridiculous endeavor. And then of course, there was the circus aspect – performing in parks, on makeshift stages, community centers, night clubs – each time performing a different version of our ever-evolving show. We met many amazing and interesting people, and saw some pretty incredible areas of the country. It was all quite a whirlwind.

____________

Now, I’m working full time doing motion graphics for a documentary film about a feminist art collective, the Heretics. I wake up at 7 am everyday, have a nice breakfast of granola and coffee while I read the Seattle P-I online, then bike 10 miles to work… spend six hours working on, like, five or six seconds of animation, then bike 10 miles home. Biking is both my reward and punishment for sitting in front of the computer all day. When I get home I can relax (!?), make dinner, read, watch movies, do art projects, and hang out with my housemates.

It’s so weird for me to only have one thing I need to focus on. I’m so used to multi-tasking to the extreme, having at least a dozen different projects, meetings, jobs to do all at once. My boss is a Hampshire professor, so it feels sort of like having a full time one-on-one animation class. Except I’m getting paid. And, Joan doesn’t know anything about how to do animation, she just has a vague idea of what she wants things to look like.

How did a 21-year-old girl, still in school, get a job doing special effects on a feature film, having no prior experience, or even training? I’m basically incredibly lucky. Last summer I did a internship there two days a week, and randomly did one little animation. They loved it, and I kept working through the school year once every week or two, and now I’m back full time. I already know After Effects a thousand times better than I did last week, and I’m learning more about it every day.

I’m not sure which of these lifestyles I prefer. I mean, they’re both pretty much all I could ever hope for…

-Molly

p.s. If you are an unfortunate troglodyte who has not yet seen Dr. Horrible’s Sing Along Blog, stop what you are doing, close the ten other firefox windows you have open, and watch it right now. It’s probably going to change your life.